The way I see, I usually wake up at 5:55AM in the morning, I am jobber person, and at 7:30 officially our office started every. within the period from 5:55 to 7:30 and do pray, reciting of holy Quran, walk to office.

Hi Wesal,Thanks for your comments on LearnEnglish Teens. This website is especially for teenagers aged 13-17 years old but it sounds like you are older than that. You are welcome to keep on using LearnEnglish Teens but if you are over 17, please do NOT post any more comments as we must keep this strictly for teenagers to interact with each other. You are welcome to join our LearnEnglish page for adults and post comments there: www.britishcouncil.org/learnenglish
Best wishes, Joanna.

Thanks for notification, I do not have any special mean, only I wanted to learn something, the adult part is not as update as this one, here is a lot of thing that a learnt, however I do not mind wish best of luck to your team.

Hi Tessy. Sorry you had to wait. We receive many messages each day and we need to check them all carefully, so you may have to wait sometimes before your message is posted. But we aim to publish all messages within 24 hours so if your message isn't published yet, please be patient and check back a little later. Thanks! Best wishes :)

Hi Charles. Yes, these words are very common, aren't they? Have you heard them in films and songs? These are quite informal, so they're fine when you are speaking but in writing you should use the long forms (got to, going to, want to). And these are common in both British English and American English. How about you, do you say gonna or going to?

If you are emailing or messaging your friends, wanna is fine so don't worry! But if you're writing something more formal such as something for school, you should use want to. :)

British and American English are actually more similar than different and many things are the same. But there are some important differences. For example, do you say lift or elevator? The first one is British English and the second one is American. Have a look at this page on the LearnEnglish site for adults to learn more. There's also a funny video on the site about this topic :)

Thank for your answer.
Is it okay if we abbreviate auxiliary verb for writing something more formal such as for school ?
e.g. : she is beautiful = she's beautiful
Thank you
I'll be waiting for your answer.

Hi Charles. If you’re writing something formal, use the full form and not the abbreviated form. Formal pieces of writing include essays, letters and reports. But if you’re writing something informal, such as a letter to a friend or a blog, the abbreviated form is fine and full forms are often used too. Good luck with all your writing :)

Hi Charles,
LearnEnglish Teens has a Facebook page and Twitter account and you are welcome to join us there. We won't be able to answer all your grammar questions there though. As I said before, we are a small team but we will help you as much as we can.
Best wishes, Jo (LearnEnglish Teens.)